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Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1965-10-29

Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1965-10-29, page 01

2I\Q^ Serving Columbus, Dayton. Centraf and Southwestern Ohio "^^^ »l^}'^.iv'...^^^fj;',]^^
Vol. 43, No. 44
PRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1965 — 3 CHESHVAN 5726 ¦
Family Service To Hold Annual Dinner
Jewish Family Service will mark the beginning of its 58th year of service to the Columbus Jewish Community with its Annual Dinner Meeting to be held at Donka's Provincial House, 4040 E. Broad St., Wednesday, November 17, at 6 p.m.
Principal speaker for the evening's program will be Arthur Leader, Director of Special Services of the New York Jewish Family Service. His topic will be "The Role of the Family Agency in treating Children of All Ages."
CHAIRMAN of the Arrangements Committee for the Annual Meeting is Mrs. Morris Payne. Other mem¬ bers of the Committee are: Mrs. Albert Blank, Mr. Samuel Oppen¬ heimer, Mrs. David Roth, Mr. Robert Shamansky.
Mrs. Melvin Schottenstein and Mr. Manuel M. Sobel (Program); Mesdames Milton Parker and Leon Schottenstein (Host and Hos¬ tess) ; Mr. Millard Cummins (Dinner Arrangements); Mesdames Morris Groner, Louis Krakoff and Norman Folpe (Telephone); Mrs. George Levine (Invitations); and Mesdames Melvin Rachoft and Walter Simon (Decorations).
ANOTHER ITEM of business at the Annual Meeting will be the selection of a slate of officers and trustees for the '6S-'66 year. Mar¬ vin Glassman is currently serving as President; William GUck, Vice- President; Mrs. Joseph Horchow,- Secretary; and Carl B- MeUraan, Treasurer.
Ben M. Mandlekorn, Executive Director and Murray T. Danin¬ hirsch, Associate-Director, direct the counsellors and caseworkers who staff Jewish Family Service.
FOR THE 57 YEARS since its
founding, JFS has been actively engaged in the counselling and assisting of Jewish families and in¬ dividuals facing difficulties of var¬ ious types.
Evolving from an agency primar¬ ily engaged in assisting Jewish immigrants from Europe at the turn of the century, the work done by the agency today reflects the complex problems arising from the growing prosperity of the Jewish Community and the impact of American life on the traditional Jewish family patterns.
SUCH WIDELY DIVERSE situ¬ ations as juvenile delinquency, men¬ tal illness, family confhct, job re¬ training, aid to the physically handicapped, unwed mothers, new Americans, Parolees, foster care and numerous others pass through the doors of this agency.
JFS emphasizes the need of the client to better understand his own problems, so that he, with his new found comprehension, can more effectively confront his situation. Where the financial resources exist, fees are charged for counselling. All JFS services are treated in the utmost confidence between client and counsellor.
Mrs. Leeman Visits Europe On A UJ.A. Study Mission
The American Joint Distribution Committee can make no further re¬ ductions in its overseas relief and rehabilitation requirements, in spite of the loss of 25% in annual income that it has suffered as a result of the end of the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany in 1964, JDC Director- General Charles H. Jordan told the 1965 annual UJA Women's Division Overseas Study Mission at a meet¬ ing at the Hotel Crillon.
Among the 19 members of the mission present was Mrs. Milton B. Leeman of Columbus, who is a member of the board of the Women's Division of the United Jewish Fund and Council of Co¬ lumbus, having previously served as Chairman for one year and C!o- chairman for two years.
The group's visit to France was the fu-st leg of 23-days study tour of Jewish needs and problems overseas, which took them next to Rome, then on to Israel.
MRS. LEEMAN'S REPORT will be an important factor in deter mining the goal of the United Jewish Fund and Council of Columbus annual fund-raising campaign.
JDC receives its main support from the National United Jewish Appeal to which the United Jewish Fund and Council of Columbus makes a major contribution.
In briefing the women on JDC s worldwide operation, Mr. Jordan noted that the welfare agency s main responsibilities today lie in Europe, Israel and the Moslem countries of North Africa and Iran "Even during the 'fat years' of a $30,000,000 budget, we never were able fully to meet the needs m these areas" he said.
MRS. LEEMAN is shown at right as she departed via Air France as one of a group of 20 women leaders from 14 key communities across the country for a three-week overseas survey of welfare, re¬ settlement and immigrant absorp¬ tion programs supported by the
United Jewish Appeal in Europe and Israel.
She has been active in many local welfare and civic organiza¬ tions and is a leader in the Women's Division of the Jewish welfare fund, which allocates a major part of its proceeds to the nationwide campaigns of the United Jewish Appeal.
MRS. LEEMAN is a member of of the Advisory Board of the Co¬ lumbus Hillel House and was Chair¬ man this year for the local district B'nai B'rith Convention hold in Co¬ lumbus.
She is former President of B'nai B'rith Women and currently serves as District Treasurer. Mrs. Leeman has been a leader in tho Girl Scouts and served its Colum¬ bus Council. She is a former Vice- President of Temple Tifereth Israel Sisterhood. Mrs. Leeman visited Israel in 1961.
The World's Week
Compiled from JTA and WUP Reporh
NEW YORK (JTA) — The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, representing 21 national Jewish groups in the U.S. called on the Soviet Union to reverse the action of Its United Nations delegation in "frustrating" adoption of a U.N. convention condemning anti-Semitism.
WASHINGTON (JTA) — The Jewish Labor Committee ended its 30lh anniversary convention with a resolution rejecting "the counsel of those who urge a people in the U.S.S.R." and calling for continued action together with the labor movement and Jewish community. The. convention was attended by more than 500 delegates.
TORONTO (JTA) — A Toronto park last May whore the 23-year-old unemployed neo-Nazi tried to stage an anti- Semitic rally. Beattie was found guilty of causing a public disturbance and fined $150. He was given a month to pay the fine. Asked if he had anything to say, he told Magistrate Fred Hayes "I am sorry I was found gtiilty." Outside the courtroom he gave photographers the Nazi salute.
NEW YORK (JTA) — The New York police department deployed policemen at 36 synagogues and 18 yeshivas on New York's lower East Side last weekend to protect Jews in the area attending Sabbath services. The action followed an emergency meeting of 20 rabbis with police after a series of attacks by hoodlums on both young and old Jews en route to and from the Synagogues and Jewish schools.
KEY WEST, Florida (JTA) — Five Jewish refugees from Cuba, including an 82-year-old woman—the first Jews to arrive since Fidel Castro relaxed his regime's exit ban two weeks ago—landed here today in a 28-foot boat. They braved the hazardous 90-mile voyage to join their children and other relatives in the United States. The refugees were immediately taken to the United Hias Service office in Miami, located at the U.S. Government Cuban Refugee Center, for resettlement assistance.
WALTHAM, .Mass. (JTA) — Brandeis University will establish an endowed professorial chair to honor the memory of Ambassador Adlal E. Stevenson, one of the University's most distinguished friends, it was announced here. The chair in international politics will be created through a $250,000 public subscription campaign, together with $150,000 in funds to bo provided under tho University's .second Ford Foundation matching grant which Brandeis is using primarily to encourage endowments for faculty chairs as well as fellowships and scholarships.
Stern New CR C Chairman Succeeding Feinknopf
Mrs. Milton B. Leeman
Judge Leonard J. Stem has been appointed Chairman of the Com munity Relations Committee of the United Jewish Fund and Coun cil. The announcement was made by Abe I. Yenkin, President of the Fund. Judge Stern succeeds Mark D. Feinknopf who has completed three terms as Committee Chair man.
THE COMMUNITY Relations Committee engages in a broad pro gram to promote racial and reh gious understanding and works for the elimination of anti-Semitism and other forms of bigotry and in tolerance.
Judge Stern has long been active in community relations work. He has been a member of the Com¬ munity Relations Committee fo'r many years and has served for the past two years as chairman of its Civil Rights Subcommittee. He is a member of the Ohio-Kentucky Regional Board of the Anti-Defa¬ mation League.
HE IS A past president of Temple Israel and is currenUy a member of the Board of Trustees of the United Jewish Fund and Council.
He served with distinction as President of the Columbus Bar Association, and is presently a member of the Board of the Frank¬ lin County TB Society.
JUDGE STERN announced the appointment of Dr. Harold L. Monett and Lawrence D. Schaffer as chairmen of the two major standing subcommittees of the Community Relations Committee. Dr. Monett will again chair the Education Subcommittee, of which he has been chairman for the past two years.
This Subcommittee Is responsible for the broad area of positive edu-
Hebrew University President At O.S.U.
President Eliahu Elath of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, former Israeli Ambassador to the United States and to Great Britain, wiil speak at 4 p.m. Tuesday, November 2, on the Ohio State University campus.
Topic of the lecture, to be delivered at Hagerty Hall Auditorium, 1775 S. College Rd., will be: "Israel's Relations with the New Nations of Africa and Asia." Ohio Stale's Graduate School will sponsor the event, which will be open to tho public.
THE STATESMAN-SCHOLAR, a [
specialist in social and economic problems of the Middle East, will i be honored at a luncheon to be i.' given by Ohio State's President Novice G. Fawcett at noon Tuesday in the Ohio Union.
President Elath was born in Rus¬ sia in 1903. After receiving a tra¬ ditional Jewish education, he en¬ rolled as a medical student at the i University of Kiev. He arrived in Palestine as a pioneer in 1925, working first as an agricultural laborer and later with a group which helped to build the palace of Emir Abdullah in Amman.
Because of his growing interest in the Arab east and its people, he then enrolled at the Hebrew Uni¬ versity, of which he is a graduate.
HE RECEIVED early recogni¬ tion as a writer and analyst of Middle Eastern affairs. From 1931- 34 he was a correspondent for Palestine journals and for Reuters in Syria and Lebanon, During this period he also attended the Amer¬ ican University in F.oirut.
His intimate knowledge of the Middle East led to his appointment in 1934 as head of the Middle and Near Eastern Division of the Jewish Agency. In 19'15 he became its rep¬ resentative in the United States, a position he held until 1948, when Israel became an independent state and he was named its first ambas¬ sador to this country.
HIS APPOINTMENT to the post of ambassador to Great Britain followed in 1950. After a decade of service in London, Mr. Elath re¬ turned to .Jerusalem as poUtical adviser to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Later he became head of the Afro-Asian Institute of Histad- rut.
president of the Israel
He
Eliahu Elath
Oriental Society at the Hebrew University, where an ever-increas¬ ing number of sludents from Afri¬ can and Asian countries are en¬ rolled. He is the author of impor¬ tant works on the ¦ Bedouin' in the Syrian desert, the result of studies pursued in Lebanon under a Rocke¬ feller Foundation scholarship, and has written other scholarly contri¬ butions on the Middle East.
THE WILL OF ISRAEL'S second president, Izhak Bcn-Zvi, requested that Mr. Elath head tho Hebrew University's Ben-Zvi Institute for Research on Jewish communities in the Middle East, which Mr. Ben- Zvi had founded.
During a visit to the U.S. in June, 1963, Mr. Elath received honorary degrees from the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion and from Brandeis Univer¬ sity. In 1964 he also received an honorary degree from Wayne State University.
Leonard J. Stern
cational programming to strengthen intergroup and interfaith under¬ standing and good will.
LAWRENCE D. SCHAFFER will assume the chairmanship of the Civif Rights Subcommittee of which hu has been an active member since its inception. The responsi¬ bility of this Subcommittee is the area of combatting anti-Semitism, dealing with the various areas of discrimination, and handling mat¬ ters pertaining to law and legisla¬ tion.
Mr. Schaffcr is a member of the Board of Trustees of the United Jewish Fund and Council and served last year as chairman of the Young Men's Division, the pro¬ fessional director of the Com¬ munity Relations Committee is Seymour Gorchoff. His staff asso¬ ciates are Hersh L. Alderstein and Ronald 11. Snyder.
World Jewish Population Numbers Thirteen Million
NEW'YORK (JTA)-Thc Jewish population in the United States is estimated to have been 5,600,000 at the start of 1965 and the world Jewish population is estimated at 13,216,000, according to data compiled for the new edition of the American Jewish Year Book.
New York City has an estimated Jewish population of 1,836,000, Nassau county 373,000, Westchester 131,000 and Suffolk county 42,000. The figures total to a Jewish population for Greater New York of 2,3113,000. Almost half of all Ameri¬
can Jews in the United States— -2,678,175 -live in Greater New York and in the neighboring counties of New York and New Jersey.
DATA ON JEWS in other coun¬ try's indicate that:
1. A total of 2,^54,000 were esti¬ mated to live in the .Soviet Union and another 285,000 in ot.itr parts of the Soviet bloc.
2. Israel's population at the end of 1904 was 2,531,000 of whom Jews were 2,244,700. The others, mainly Arabs and Druses, numbered 265,500.
3. South America's 689,950 Jews include 450,000 in Argentina (with 300,000 in Buenos Aires), 130,000 in Brazil, 50,000 in Uruguay, and 30,000 in Chile.
4. Other large concentrations of Jews are: France, 500,000; Great Britain, 450.000; Canada, 207,000; Rumania, 140,000; South Africa, 116,000; Morocco, 85,000; Hungary, 80.000; Iran, 8 0,0 00; Austraha, 67,000.
5.-In Cuba, 1904 marked a further decrease in Jewish population to 2,750. Political unrest in Latin
American countries led to a certain amount of migration from one coun¬ try to another, and some immigra¬ tion abroad.
THE GREAT INFLUX of im¬ migration from North Africa to France has stopped but a small flow still continues. There has also been some emigration to Spain, mainly from North Africa, bring¬ ing the size of the Jewish com¬ munity in Spain to between 4,000 and 6,000 persons.
Chronicling
The News
Editorial 2
Slioppipg Guide 8
Synagogues. 8
Society 5,6,7
Sports 9, 10, 11
Teen Scene , 13
Real Estate 14

2I\Q^ Serving Columbus, Dayton. Centraf and Southwestern Ohio "^^^ »l^}'^.iv'...^^^fj;',]^^
Vol. 43, No. 44
PRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1965 — 3 CHESHVAN 5726 ¦
Family Service To Hold Annual Dinner
Jewish Family Service will mark the beginning of its 58th year of service to the Columbus Jewish Community with its Annual Dinner Meeting to be held at Donka's Provincial House, 4040 E. Broad St., Wednesday, November 17, at 6 p.m.
Principal speaker for the evening's program will be Arthur Leader, Director of Special Services of the New York Jewish Family Service. His topic will be "The Role of the Family Agency in treating Children of All Ages."
CHAIRMAN of the Arrangements Committee for the Annual Meeting is Mrs. Morris Payne. Other mem¬ bers of the Committee are: Mrs. Albert Blank, Mr. Samuel Oppen¬ heimer, Mrs. David Roth, Mr. Robert Shamansky.
Mrs. Melvin Schottenstein and Mr. Manuel M. Sobel (Program); Mesdames Milton Parker and Leon Schottenstein (Host and Hos¬ tess) ; Mr. Millard Cummins (Dinner Arrangements); Mesdames Morris Groner, Louis Krakoff and Norman Folpe (Telephone); Mrs. George Levine (Invitations); and Mesdames Melvin Rachoft and Walter Simon (Decorations).
ANOTHER ITEM of business at the Annual Meeting will be the selection of a slate of officers and trustees for the '6S-'66 year. Mar¬ vin Glassman is currently serving as President; William GUck, Vice- President; Mrs. Joseph Horchow,- Secretary; and Carl B- MeUraan, Treasurer.
Ben M. Mandlekorn, Executive Director and Murray T. Danin¬ hirsch, Associate-Director, direct the counsellors and caseworkers who staff Jewish Family Service.
FOR THE 57 YEARS since its
founding, JFS has been actively engaged in the counselling and assisting of Jewish families and in¬ dividuals facing difficulties of var¬ ious types.
Evolving from an agency primar¬ ily engaged in assisting Jewish immigrants from Europe at the turn of the century, the work done by the agency today reflects the complex problems arising from the growing prosperity of the Jewish Community and the impact of American life on the traditional Jewish family patterns.
SUCH WIDELY DIVERSE situ¬ ations as juvenile delinquency, men¬ tal illness, family confhct, job re¬ training, aid to the physically handicapped, unwed mothers, new Americans, Parolees, foster care and numerous others pass through the doors of this agency.
JFS emphasizes the need of the client to better understand his own problems, so that he, with his new found comprehension, can more effectively confront his situation. Where the financial resources exist, fees are charged for counselling. All JFS services are treated in the utmost confidence between client and counsellor.
Mrs. Leeman Visits Europe On A UJ.A. Study Mission
The American Joint Distribution Committee can make no further re¬ ductions in its overseas relief and rehabilitation requirements, in spite of the loss of 25% in annual income that it has suffered as a result of the end of the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany in 1964, JDC Director- General Charles H. Jordan told the 1965 annual UJA Women's Division Overseas Study Mission at a meet¬ ing at the Hotel Crillon.
Among the 19 members of the mission present was Mrs. Milton B. Leeman of Columbus, who is a member of the board of the Women's Division of the United Jewish Fund and Council of Co¬ lumbus, having previously served as Chairman for one year and C!o- chairman for two years.
The group's visit to France was the fu-st leg of 23-days study tour of Jewish needs and problems overseas, which took them next to Rome, then on to Israel.
MRS. LEEMAN'S REPORT will be an important factor in deter mining the goal of the United Jewish Fund and Council of Columbus annual fund-raising campaign.
JDC receives its main support from the National United Jewish Appeal to which the United Jewish Fund and Council of Columbus makes a major contribution.
In briefing the women on JDC s worldwide operation, Mr. Jordan noted that the welfare agency s main responsibilities today lie in Europe, Israel and the Moslem countries of North Africa and Iran "Even during the 'fat years' of a $30,000,000 budget, we never were able fully to meet the needs m these areas" he said.
MRS. LEEMAN is shown at right as she departed via Air France as one of a group of 20 women leaders from 14 key communities across the country for a three-week overseas survey of welfare, re¬ settlement and immigrant absorp¬ tion programs supported by the
United Jewish Appeal in Europe and Israel.
She has been active in many local welfare and civic organiza¬ tions and is a leader in the Women's Division of the Jewish welfare fund, which allocates a major part of its proceeds to the nationwide campaigns of the United Jewish Appeal.
MRS. LEEMAN is a member of of the Advisory Board of the Co¬ lumbus Hillel House and was Chair¬ man this year for the local district B'nai B'rith Convention hold in Co¬ lumbus.
She is former President of B'nai B'rith Women and currently serves as District Treasurer. Mrs. Leeman has been a leader in tho Girl Scouts and served its Colum¬ bus Council. She is a former Vice- President of Temple Tifereth Israel Sisterhood. Mrs. Leeman visited Israel in 1961.
The World's Week
Compiled from JTA and WUP Reporh
NEW YORK (JTA) — The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, representing 21 national Jewish groups in the U.S. called on the Soviet Union to reverse the action of Its United Nations delegation in "frustrating" adoption of a U.N. convention condemning anti-Semitism.
WASHINGTON (JTA) — The Jewish Labor Committee ended its 30lh anniversary convention with a resolution rejecting "the counsel of those who urge a people in the U.S.S.R." and calling for continued action together with the labor movement and Jewish community. The. convention was attended by more than 500 delegates.
TORONTO (JTA) — A Toronto park last May whore the 23-year-old unemployed neo-Nazi tried to stage an anti- Semitic rally. Beattie was found guilty of causing a public disturbance and fined $150. He was given a month to pay the fine. Asked if he had anything to say, he told Magistrate Fred Hayes "I am sorry I was found gtiilty." Outside the courtroom he gave photographers the Nazi salute.
NEW YORK (JTA) — The New York police department deployed policemen at 36 synagogues and 18 yeshivas on New York's lower East Side last weekend to protect Jews in the area attending Sabbath services. The action followed an emergency meeting of 20 rabbis with police after a series of attacks by hoodlums on both young and old Jews en route to and from the Synagogues and Jewish schools.
KEY WEST, Florida (JTA) — Five Jewish refugees from Cuba, including an 82-year-old woman—the first Jews to arrive since Fidel Castro relaxed his regime's exit ban two weeks ago—landed here today in a 28-foot boat. They braved the hazardous 90-mile voyage to join their children and other relatives in the United States. The refugees were immediately taken to the United Hias Service office in Miami, located at the U.S. Government Cuban Refugee Center, for resettlement assistance.
WALTHAM, .Mass. (JTA) — Brandeis University will establish an endowed professorial chair to honor the memory of Ambassador Adlal E. Stevenson, one of the University's most distinguished friends, it was announced here. The chair in international politics will be created through a $250,000 public subscription campaign, together with $150,000 in funds to bo provided under tho University's .second Ford Foundation matching grant which Brandeis is using primarily to encourage endowments for faculty chairs as well as fellowships and scholarships.
Stern New CR C Chairman Succeeding Feinknopf
Mrs. Milton B. Leeman
Judge Leonard J. Stem has been appointed Chairman of the Com munity Relations Committee of the United Jewish Fund and Coun cil. The announcement was made by Abe I. Yenkin, President of the Fund. Judge Stern succeeds Mark D. Feinknopf who has completed three terms as Committee Chair man.
THE COMMUNITY Relations Committee engages in a broad pro gram to promote racial and reh gious understanding and works for the elimination of anti-Semitism and other forms of bigotry and in tolerance.
Judge Stern has long been active in community relations work. He has been a member of the Com¬ munity Relations Committee fo'r many years and has served for the past two years as chairman of its Civil Rights Subcommittee. He is a member of the Ohio-Kentucky Regional Board of the Anti-Defa¬ mation League.
HE IS A past president of Temple Israel and is currenUy a member of the Board of Trustees of the United Jewish Fund and Council.
He served with distinction as President of the Columbus Bar Association, and is presently a member of the Board of the Frank¬ lin County TB Society.
JUDGE STERN announced the appointment of Dr. Harold L. Monett and Lawrence D. Schaffer as chairmen of the two major standing subcommittees of the Community Relations Committee. Dr. Monett will again chair the Education Subcommittee, of which he has been chairman for the past two years.
This Subcommittee Is responsible for the broad area of positive edu-
Hebrew University President At O.S.U.
President Eliahu Elath of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, former Israeli Ambassador to the United States and to Great Britain, wiil speak at 4 p.m. Tuesday, November 2, on the Ohio State University campus.
Topic of the lecture, to be delivered at Hagerty Hall Auditorium, 1775 S. College Rd., will be: "Israel's Relations with the New Nations of Africa and Asia." Ohio Stale's Graduate School will sponsor the event, which will be open to tho public.
THE STATESMAN-SCHOLAR, a [
specialist in social and economic problems of the Middle East, will i be honored at a luncheon to be i.' given by Ohio State's President Novice G. Fawcett at noon Tuesday in the Ohio Union.
President Elath was born in Rus¬ sia in 1903. After receiving a tra¬ ditional Jewish education, he en¬ rolled as a medical student at the i University of Kiev. He arrived in Palestine as a pioneer in 1925, working first as an agricultural laborer and later with a group which helped to build the palace of Emir Abdullah in Amman.
Because of his growing interest in the Arab east and its people, he then enrolled at the Hebrew Uni¬ versity, of which he is a graduate.
HE RECEIVED early recogni¬ tion as a writer and analyst of Middle Eastern affairs. From 1931- 34 he was a correspondent for Palestine journals and for Reuters in Syria and Lebanon, During this period he also attended the Amer¬ ican University in F.oirut.
His intimate knowledge of the Middle East led to his appointment in 1934 as head of the Middle and Near Eastern Division of the Jewish Agency. In 19'15 he became its rep¬ resentative in the United States, a position he held until 1948, when Israel became an independent state and he was named its first ambas¬ sador to this country.
HIS APPOINTMENT to the post of ambassador to Great Britain followed in 1950. After a decade of service in London, Mr. Elath re¬ turned to .Jerusalem as poUtical adviser to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Later he became head of the Afro-Asian Institute of Histad- rut.
president of the Israel
He
Eliahu Elath
Oriental Society at the Hebrew University, where an ever-increas¬ ing number of sludents from Afri¬ can and Asian countries are en¬ rolled. He is the author of impor¬ tant works on the ¦ Bedouin' in the Syrian desert, the result of studies pursued in Lebanon under a Rocke¬ feller Foundation scholarship, and has written other scholarly contri¬ butions on the Middle East.
THE WILL OF ISRAEL'S second president, Izhak Bcn-Zvi, requested that Mr. Elath head tho Hebrew University's Ben-Zvi Institute for Research on Jewish communities in the Middle East, which Mr. Ben- Zvi had founded.
During a visit to the U.S. in June, 1963, Mr. Elath received honorary degrees from the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion and from Brandeis Univer¬ sity. In 1964 he also received an honorary degree from Wayne State University.
Leonard J. Stern
cational programming to strengthen intergroup and interfaith under¬ standing and good will.
LAWRENCE D. SCHAFFER will assume the chairmanship of the Civif Rights Subcommittee of which hu has been an active member since its inception. The responsi¬ bility of this Subcommittee is the area of combatting anti-Semitism, dealing with the various areas of discrimination, and handling mat¬ ters pertaining to law and legisla¬ tion.
Mr. Schaffcr is a member of the Board of Trustees of the United Jewish Fund and Council and served last year as chairman of the Young Men's Division, the pro¬ fessional director of the Com¬ munity Relations Committee is Seymour Gorchoff. His staff asso¬ ciates are Hersh L. Alderstein and Ronald 11. Snyder.
World Jewish Population Numbers Thirteen Million
NEW'YORK (JTA)-Thc Jewish population in the United States is estimated to have been 5,600,000 at the start of 1965 and the world Jewish population is estimated at 13,216,000, according to data compiled for the new edition of the American Jewish Year Book.
New York City has an estimated Jewish population of 1,836,000, Nassau county 373,000, Westchester 131,000 and Suffolk county 42,000. The figures total to a Jewish population for Greater New York of 2,3113,000. Almost half of all Ameri¬
can Jews in the United States— -2,678,175 -live in Greater New York and in the neighboring counties of New York and New Jersey.
DATA ON JEWS in other coun¬ try's indicate that:
1. A total of 2,^54,000 were esti¬ mated to live in the .Soviet Union and another 285,000 in ot.itr parts of the Soviet bloc.
2. Israel's population at the end of 1904 was 2,531,000 of whom Jews were 2,244,700. The others, mainly Arabs and Druses, numbered 265,500.
3. South America's 689,950 Jews include 450,000 in Argentina (with 300,000 in Buenos Aires), 130,000 in Brazil, 50,000 in Uruguay, and 30,000 in Chile.
4. Other large concentrations of Jews are: France, 500,000; Great Britain, 450.000; Canada, 207,000; Rumania, 140,000; South Africa, 116,000; Morocco, 85,000; Hungary, 80.000; Iran, 8 0,0 00; Austraha, 67,000.
5.-In Cuba, 1904 marked a further decrease in Jewish population to 2,750. Political unrest in Latin
American countries led to a certain amount of migration from one coun¬ try to another, and some immigra¬ tion abroad.
THE GREAT INFLUX of im¬ migration from North Africa to France has stopped but a small flow still continues. There has also been some emigration to Spain, mainly from North Africa, bring¬ ing the size of the Jewish com¬ munity in Spain to between 4,000 and 6,000 persons.
Chronicling
The News
Editorial 2
Slioppipg Guide 8
Synagogues. 8
Society 5,6,7
Sports 9, 10, 11
Teen Scene , 13
Real Estate 14